FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to aircraft lifting surfaces and more in particular
to aircraft with a lifting surface attached to an end of the fuselage such as a horizontal
tail plane, a vertical tail plane or a canard.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] The performance of the horizontal tail plane (HTP), the vertical tail plane (VTP)
and other lifting surfaces attached to the ends of aircraft fuselages is one of the
more important issues in global aircraft design because said surfaces are used as
control and stabilizing surfaces that must provide control and stabilizing forces
in the complete flight domain.
[0003] The aim of a good aerodynamic design for a lifting surface is to control the interferences
with the fuselage which are sources of aerodynamic drag and loss of lift. In this
respect, the sweep angle of a lifting surface is a key feature of its design.
[0004] Aircraft configurations with forward swept and backward swept horizontal tail planes
at different sweep angles are known in the art. In relation to commercial aircraft
configured with a tubular fuselage, a wing, an empennage with HTP and VTP, such as
the A320 or the A380, all known configurations include HTP/VTP with a constant sweep
angle distribution along the span.
[0005] In these configurations and due to the interference with the fuselage, the inner
sections of the HTP/VTP are not working at the same flow conditions than the outer
sections, providing room for further optimization. This effect is more pronounced
the greater the change in the area of the cross section of the rear fuselage along
the zone to which the HTP/VTP is attached.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] It is an object of the present invention to provide a lifting surface attached to an
end of the fuselage of an aircraft optimized in size.
[0007] It is another object of the present invention to provide a lifting surface attached
to an end of the fuselage of an aircraft having an improved lift curve slope with
respect to known lifting surfaces.
[0008] These and other objects are met by a lifting surface attached to the frontal end
or to the rear end (that have a variable cross-sectional area) of a tubular-shaped
fuselage of an aircraft which is configured with a variable sweep angle α in an inboard
part and with a constant sweep angle α
1 in an outboard part.
[0009] The lifting surface can be either a backward-swept lifting surface, as happens in
the majority of commercial aircraft, or a forward-swept lifting surface.
[0010] In an embodiment for a lifting surface attached to the fuselage rear end (such as
a HTP or a VTP), the sweep angle α in the inboard part (which is variable along its
span) is lower than the constant sweep angle α
1 in the outboard part. The local Mach number distribution along the span of the lifting
surface due to the interference with the fuselage (lower Mach numbers in the inboard
part than in the outboard part) allows a reduction of the sweep angle in the inboard
part that increases the lift curve slope of the lifting surface.
[0011] Advantageously, the variable sweep angle α in the inboard part of the lifting surface
increases along its span. A progressive increment of the sweep angle α in the inboard
part up to the constant value α
1 in the outboard part provides an optimized design of the lifting surface.
[0012] Advantageously, the lifting surface comprises a leading edge, a torsion box and a
trailing edge and the torsion box comprises straight frontal and rear spars. The variable
sweep angle in the inboard part is thus compatible with a torsion box comprising straight
spars.
[0013] In an embodiment for a lifting surface attached to the fuselage frontal end (such
as a canard) the sweep angle α in the inboard part (which is variable along its span)
is greater than the constant sweep angle α
1 in the outboard part. The increase of the sweep angle in the inboard part decreases
the lift curve slope but allows delaying the adverse effects of compressibility and
decreasing the sweep angle of the outboard part.
[0014] Advantageously the sweep angle in the inboard part of the lifting surface attached
to the frontal end decreases along its span. A progressive decrement of the sweep
angle α in the inboard part up to the constant value α
1 in the outboard part provides an optimized design of the lifting surface.
[0015] Other desirable features and advantages of the aircraft according to this invention
will become apparent from the subsequent detailed description of the invention and
the appended claims, in relation with the enclosed drawings.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016]
Figure 1 is a schematic plan view of half of the fuselage rear end of a known aircraft
with a backward-swept horizontal tail plane.
Figure 2 is a Mach number vs. Span diagram for the horizontal tail plane of Figure
1.
Figure 3 is a schematic plan view of half of the fuselage rear end of an aircraft
with a backward-swept horizontal tail plane according to the present invention.
Figure 4 is an enlarged view of the projection on a horizontal plane of a line at
the 25% of the chord in the inboard part of the horizontal tail plane according to
the present invention.
Figure 5 a schematic plan view of half of the fuselage frontal end of an aircraft
with a backward-swept canard.
Figure 6 is an enlarged view of the projection on a horizontal plane of a line at
the 25% of the chord in the inboard part of a canard according to the present invention.
DETAILED OF THE INVENTION
[0017] A detailed description of the invention for a backward swept HTP follows.
[0018] Figure 1 illustrates a known aircraft 9 with a HTP 13 attached to the fuselage rear
end 11.
[0019] The HTP 13 comprises a leading edge 21, a torsion box 25, and a trailing edge 23.
The torsion box 25 comprise a frontal spar 31, a rear spar 33, ribs 35 and upper and
lower skins stiffened by stringers (not shown). The upper and lower skins are joined
to the leading edge 21 and to the trailing edge 23 forming the aerodynamic contour
of the HTP 13.
[0020] The HTP 13 is configured with a constant backward sweep angle α
1, i.e. with a constant sweep angle α
1 greater than 90º. The sweep angle is the angle formed between the aircraft plane
of symmetry 19 and the projection line 17 of a reference line of points located at
25% of the local chord of the HTP 13 on a plane perpendicular to the aircraft plane
of symmetry 19.
[0021] The sweep angle of aircraft airfoils is a design feature of aircraft that fly at
approching the speed of sound, and it is motivated by aerodynamic considerations.
The aerodynamic advantage of a backward sweep angle is that the adverse effects of
compressibility, caused by the over speed of the flow over the aerodynamic profile,
which grow as the relative thickness of that profile increases, are mainly dependent
on the component of the airflow velocity that is essentially perpendicular to the
line of 25% of the chord line of the aircraft airfoil. This velocity component decreases
as the sweep angle increases (in absolute value, either positively for backward sweep
or negatively for forward sweep).
[0022] Therefore, for a given flight speed, an airfoil with a given sweep angle will be
subjected to lower compressibility effects. This effect allows the use of a bigger
relative profile thickness, defined as the ratio between the maximum thickness of
the profile and its length in the flight or chord direction, resulting in a lower
structural weight of the airfoil because of a better structural efficiency. However,
in the flight at high speed that is characteristic of large modern commercial aircraft,
airfoils with large relative thicknesses of the aerodynamic profiles magnify the adverse
effects of air compressibility, which can be manifested as shock waves on the airfoil,
with an associated increase of the aerodynamic drag, loss of control capability and
other adverse flight phenomena. Therefore, the backward or forward sweep angle of
airfoils serves to achieve a design balance between their structural weight and acceptable
in-flight performance at speeds approaching the speed of sound.
[0023] However, analysing the performance of the known backward-swept HTP 13 it has been
noted that in some cases the distribution of the Mach number M along the span S follows
the curve 40 shown in Figure 2. The inboard sections of the HTP 13 are thus working
at lower Mach numbers than the rest of the sections; therefore those sections do not
need the sweep angle values of the outboard sections as the compressibility effects
are naturally delayed by the interaction with the fuselage recompression. As a side
effect this causes the lift curve slope of the HTP 13 to be reduced with respect to
the one that hypothetically would be obtained if the local Mach number were constant
across the span and equal to the flight Mach number.
[0024] It is believed that this behaviour is due to the interference of the airflow with
the rear end fuselage 11 because of its curved shape (in a plan view) and the recompression
which occurs as the flow approach to the fuselage end. The effect is more pronounced
the greater the change in the area of the cross section along the zone of the rear
fuselage to which the HTP is attached.
[0025] The opposite behaviour can be found in lifting surfaces attached at the frontal end
of the fuselage as the flow expands from the forward stagnation point onwards. However
it usually does not happen in a wing because it is attached to a cylindrical-shaped
fuselage where no expansion or recompression occurs due to the fuselage shape. Of
course the cylindrical fuselage affects the flow on the wing but the effect is usually
more related to the change of the flow direction than to the change of the local Mach
number which typically occurs at the rear and at the forward end of the fuselage.
[0026] Figure 3 illustrates an aircraft 9 with an HTP 43 attached to the fuselage rear end
11 configured according to this invention.
[0027] The HTP 43 comprises a leading edge 51, a torsion box 55, and a trailing edge 53.
[0028] The HTP 43 is configured with an inboard section 45 having an increasing sweep angle
α along the span and an outboard section 47 having a constant sweep angle α
1, the constant angle α
1 being greater than any value of the sweep angle α in the inboard section 45 (see
Figure 4).
[0029] The reduced sweep angles in the inboard section 45 with respect to the sweep angle
of the outboard section 47 increases the lift curve slope of the HTP 43 with respect
to the HTP 13 of the prior art, consequently allowing a size reduction in case the
size of the HTP 13 would be a relevant design variable.
[0030] In the embodiment shown in Figure 3, the torsion box 55, comprising a frontal spar
61, a rear spar 63, ribs 65 and upper and lower skins stiffened by stringers (not
shown), has the same configuration as the torsion box 23 of the HTP 13 of the prior
art because the variation of the sweep angle in the inboard section 45 with respect
to the HTP 13 does not require a modification in the configuration of the torsion
box. In other embodiments the torsion box 55 may have a different configuration.
[0031] The above description of the intention for a backward/forward swept HTP is also applicable
mutatis mutandi to a forward HTP and also to a backward/forward sweep VTP.
[0032] Figures 5 and 6 show a backward swept canard 73 attached to a fuselage frontal end
10 whose cross-sectional area increases continuously along its length.
[0033] The canard 73 is configured with an inboard section 75 having a decreasing sweep
angle α along the span and an outboard section 77 having a constant sweep angle α
1, the constant angle α
1 being lower than any value of the sweep angle α in the inboard section 75.
[0034] The sweep angle is the angle formed between the aircraft plane of symmetry 19 and
the projection line 70 of a reference line of points located at 25% of the local chord
of the canard 73 on a plane perpendicular to the aircraft plane of symmetry 19.
[0035] The increment of the sweep angle in the inboard section 75 with respect to the sweep
angle of the outboard section 77 allows delaying the compressibility effects, magnified
by the local expansion of the nose fuselage. The lift curve slope of the canard 73
can be increased by reducing the sweep angle of the outboard sections from the values
which are needed inboard, allowing the reduction of the size of the canard 73 if its
size is a relevant design variable.
[0036] Although the present invention has been described in connection with various embodiments,
it will be appreciated from the specification that various combinations of elements,
variations or improvements therein may be made, and are within the of the invention.
1. Aircraft (9) comprising a fuselage of a tubular shape with frontal and rear ends (11,
10) having a variable cross-sectional area, a wing attached to the central part of
the fuselage and at least a lifting surface (43, 73) attached to the fuselage rear
end (11) or to the fuselage frontal end (10), characterized in that said lifting surface (43, 73) is configured with a variable sweep angle α in an inboard
part (45, 75) and with a constant sweep angle α1 in an outboard part (47, 77).
2. Aircraft (9) according to claim 1, wherein:
- the lifting surface (43) is attached to the fuselage rear end (11);
- the variable sweep angle α in the inboard part (45) is lower along its span than
the constant sweep angle α1 in the outboard part (47).
3. Aircraft (9) according to claim 2, wherein the cross-sectional area of the fuselage
rear end (11) decreases continuously along its length.
4. Aircraft (9) according to any of claims 2-3, wherein the sweep angle α in the inboard
part (45) increases along its span.
5. Aircraft (9) according to any of claim 2-4, wherein the length of the inboard part
(45) is comprised between the 0-70% of the total length of the lifting surface (43).
6. Aircraft (9) according to any of claims 2-5, wherein:
- the lifting surface (43) comprises a leading edge (51), a torsion box (55) and a
trailing edge (53);
- the torsion box (55) comprises straight frontal and rear spars (61, 63).
7. Aircraft (9) according to any of claims 2-6, wherein the lifting surface (43) is a
horizontal tail plane or a vertical tail plane, with backward or forward sweep angle.
8. Aircraft (9) according to claim 1, wherein:
- the lifting surface (73) is attached to the fuselage frontal end (10);
- the variable sweep angle α in the inboard part (75) is greater along its span than
the constant sweep angle α1 in the outboard part (77).
9. Aircraft (9) according to claim 8, wherein the cross-sectional area of the fuselage
frontal end (10) increases continuously along its length.
10. Aircraft (9) according to any of claims 8-9, wherein the sweep angle α in the inboard
part (75) decreases along its span.
11. Aircraft (9) according to any of claim 8-10, wherein the length of the inboard part
(75) is comprised between the 0-70% of the total length of the lifting surface (73).
12. Aircraft (9) according to any of claims 8-11, wherein said lifting surface (73) is
a canard with backward or forward sweep angle.